d. MERE MAN xii- gsleeslvoolflslifhwcysssy. ‘hi. >5 ‘ I4.- 30'} W/ ‘reign-w w“ Paper MAXIMS 07A MER E ItiAN l uus NORTHWEST OF uu Mile éclvance , ‘American Counter-Attack Beaten Back By Germans In Tunisia. Isrshai Rommel, using this days. BULLETIN IAIN‘! LUOI LI. Ieb. u-tcri-m Adam-hi" ap- psrengy have started ths long- swsl renewal of their enh- msrlne campaign in the Cari p. bean with the sinking of a lsrgs British West Indian schooner off the coast of South erics. Three of its ss passengers are known dead and id others are Itilflried milling. Three of the l! crew members Ills are miss- ‘: ' e schooner belonged to that. Wilbert Compton, one oi s family of schooner owners, who was reported injured by In enemy shell and last seen m!" on s raft with other itoming Events ‘Talkies-Montague lsturday. i d-il-li. . "Talkies — lourls loads . i 2-17-31. "Burma used jute bags. w. 1. Bowman. I-il-li-lb-lii-ti “Box Social and dance Coo-ran m» "idly. hhrusry 1cm.’ u n ‘But Royalty an: tonight. Wllltiriders vs Rovers. and; "We to arrive, bulk oats and bulk wheat. Book now. McGuigau "14 Boy-e. a-is-ioi ' "Kinkora l-l ll. Friday iht, Iebruary 10th lgiugo and Iilorlicc. lulussa Orchestra. a-io-is-zi. ilriree Bound Movies. Bradalbsns ursday. Hunter River Pfidgy" a d“Dance in Btanhope Hall Mon- g- Ftbrvary 22nd. punches. 11 ' "Ill. Tuesday night. 2-lB-20-2i. "Reserve Fnd . Fob 38th. cud Party. scacseprriu“%lauyy “flooding live hogs at. Broadsi- “i every Friday u 11.30 am. Arthur Harlem. i-lti-li-lll-Bi "loading hogs this week. Albany “WWW afternoon; Emerald my untill 11.80 am. G. O. Ind A» 0. Green. flmljgiualégyy in Holy Redeem’: » . rue mbrllfi. Lunch. nil... 26c. “WM m. st. Charles Auxil- y- z-ia-ii. “Distributing centre Ration No. 2 will be distributed at the {shite um , cro ud. real-us. at} atéintit... 1o s. mi u» a“"..'.i‘ idhiflieie“? Brent wpcottoittn m. s-is-ul "livestock llsr Board w"! hogs at gfuuegsy River u-siii y“ mo. "n2": nfisofi "'1'! two weeks tbcreszter. John ' . Iilh Bank inghfirg. week of town as lourll. ‘it’ Hm llili ti! Cheri “i414 h dur "a; n iii‘ (if-Chariot '" "s: ma“ Ill. Melville. I! fennoon 1m lsdforo. t market price assur- ltarkstlng s-is-u. ‘Maus- 3.55;’; m: a: I 1 liouduely o. fiii. ' Isnsiugtoii. m z U. Livfll . ly “ ‘ya h} swag-is "o ml"- Livu 8% i if‘ .. This check to Allied plans and db... wis announced today in an Allied headquarters communique which said armored battles raged sil day yesterday in the ares. west oi i-‘aid Pass soil were still continuing If. nlllstfall "on the outskirts oi Bbeitls,” I00 all; inland and about missiles sonthwct of Tunis. films-Hind _ B! DANIIL DI LUCI Associated PHI Staff Writer ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, NORTH AIILICA. Isis. 1‘i—(AI)- tws divisions of his veteran African tank fight- m and his heaviest armor. has smashed an American counter-attack, st but for the time being. and with a fresh lfl-mile thrust in Central Tu- rtle yesterday has scored s net advance oi some l5 miles in. the. last ngement of their positions The Germans thus had marked up a gain of about i8 miles yester- day a ter s. check from the United States counter-attack near aldl Bouzid, southeast of Sbeltla. Tonight. as German tanks slash- ed at American reargusrd armor striving to check the onslaught until a new defence line can be consolidated in the hills west of Kssseriris near the Algerian border, U. S. air force headquarters sn- nounced three oi its forward bases had been evacuated. One of these was st Sbeltla and two were at ‘rheleptc, near libriana. close to the Algerian border. This ouncement ssid some fuel. rs- tions and a few planes damaged beyond repair were left behind. Rommers as-mue forward drive ‘ was launched Just after American armored and combat teams had taken over defence of the area. from Preach forces and before the new units had time to familiarise themselves with the territory or devel stron defences. In t e sout em ‘runlsian sector, 1'10 miles distant, however. the of Gen. Sir Bern- reported areth Line for an as- might retrieve the Rommel to rs- nearing ssult whichh situation by forcing group his forces. American casualties were heavy, it. was reported at headquarters. and several units of American troops were cut off in the push of Rommelrs two armored divisions. which Mark V1 tanks. These 0.8. units had not been heard from but head- quarters hoped they would yet make their way back to the main The new Allied line. observers believed. may run along the hills westward of Kuserine and Perim- um. An officer st Allied headquarters commenting on the communique from Cairo which announced that the 8th Army is advancin upon Medinine in the Mareth L e. d5 miles this side of the Libyan bor- der. said Rommel might soon forced to recall his tanks to meet the southern threat. Another headquarters source commentod that Rommel may al- ready have got sll that he wanted in the current offensivs-plenty of elbow room. Reveal llamas 0f é trash Victims HALIFAX Feb. l7—(CP)—Names of the two ri.c.n.r~. pilots killed in a mid-air collision yesterday n.ar Chicoutlmi. Que. were announced tonight by Eastern Air Ctlmmlnd here. Pilots of the two single-engined aircraft were: m) no. Gaga-ion. whose wife iive; at ths ommercisl Hotel. Bagotvilie. Que. and PO A..I Gil- son, ‘ivhosfninother on‘ son. ves uo . Both fliers 5P2 officially listod as "misrng, believed killed. The two aircraft were from the R..C.A.I'. Btetion atm Bstgomile and were one. rout e.a n8 alien ‘tiheglugglllded. The! ca ht e In lsiiding in s farmer's id It Bil- Anne. s small village n01!‘ 0M" coutimi. The mots wen the occupants of binne- Soliiier iilllsil At Doliort Damp DIBIIIII‘. 8.8.. Rb. lT-(Ofi- barge oi he l Oil h." u. venlgi “iii. - it 0V d and ‘escaped with slilhi Five More Enemy Ships. Destroyed In Additifi n e m y babiy Sunk And Cargo S h i p Dam- s aged. WASHINGTON, Feb. 11 —(AP)- Raiding Japanese supply lines in the Pacific. United States submar- ines have sunk five more enemy vessels, probably sunk s Japanese criuser and damaged s cargo vess- el. the navy reported today. while United States aircraft continued pounding Japanese airbases in the Cruiser Said Pro-- By lfirke L. Simpson. Associated Press War Analyst Qilhk Wllliifie of the Kharkov Bastion not only further imperils heavy Nazi forces seeking escape from the Don-Doncts Basin to the south. It could re-euact the Stalingrad tragedy on an heroic scale and force the invader back behind the line's! the Bug. Dnieper and Dvina Rivers. .. - . e There is little doubt that the Ned high command had planned event- usi evacuation of Kharkov. There ls even less doubt, however, that its garrison had been charged to hold out against all odds until huge Nazi armies southward to the sea of Azov coast, desperately trying to stall off mariv-prnnged Russian enchcieznent thrusts, had effected escape behind the Dnicper. Kharkov in German hands was the vital defence pillar covering the main rail and road crossings _of the Diliepe at the nnflhggg‘ mm" o; its great southern bcnd. Russian forces in the Losovays sector, '15 miles down tine Kharkov-Crimea railroad, are already threatening those emu. ings st s. GD-mile range. I I I I I It seems clear, as Moscow advices state. that the Nazi command had counted on the main Russian attack in the Kharkov area failing east and south of the city itself, A concentrated defence in the bosovaya- Kharkov sector was obviously aimed both at delaying the fail of Kharkov and retsinin an effective barrier against Russian southwest- Soomons Islands area. Most of the crait sent to the m“ Donald, oi that. soles probsbl bottom or damaged presumably were engaged in transporting men and equipment to the scattered Japanese bases throughout the south Pacific area. Little detail was given. The Navy uported only that the submarines accounted for the vessels in the "Pacific and Far East" waters. ' Topped by the successful tor- pedo sttsck on s cruiser which the Navy ssid probably went to the bottom. the submarines‘ bag also included sn escort vessel, s med- ium-simd tanker presumably carry- ing needed oil to Japanese bases; a transport which rnizht have been carrying troops. and two medium- sizied cargo vessels-all sunk. An additional medium-sized cargo ves- el was reported damaged. Meantime. American planes fly- ing out from Guadalcanal hit. t Japanese air ports in the north- western Solomons and made, new raids on two bases. Maritime Trust Dompany Meeting SAINT JOHN. N.B.. Feb. 1'! — tCPt- Howard P. Robinson, Saint John. was re-elected president to- day at the 14th annual meeting of the Maritime Trust Company. cy- rus P‘. Inches. K.C.. Saint John, and Peter G. Clark, Charlottetown. we're re-clected vice-oiesidents for New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. True Bill In Fraud Gases h‘ SYDNEY. N-S. Feb. 1'! —iOPl— be The Grand Jury returned true bills in Supreme Court today s- gainst. Mayor D. J. Maclnsn of alleged fraudulent, insurance tran- sections. They will on trial before "em juries st. the current term of the court. The Mayor is charged with uttering s forged document and nmmpmu; w, qpmn money under false pretenses. Sieifil i! "cil-"d jointly with him on these counts‘. and also is chafltd wlililifili’ “in forgerymnd consPirlllil i” d9!" - ‘Ihree other Cape Breton men face similar diam". and we" g?‘ sen are 906019‘! i0 I" 5° e Grand Jury tomorrow. _________ Dentenarian and Son Found Dead MABOU. N!" Feb. i1 —(OP)->A oentonsrisn and her 00-year-old son were found dead today in their home at nearby Melrose Hill. ma. Alexander MacDonald. who itiday re- hsd been ill for s few days cold. Her eon. Archie suffered from a heart ail- beiieved the son had found his mother dead. and the shock hsd brought. on s fatal heart attack. Both bodies were found in the mother's bedroom by MacDon- ald's wife. inent. Relatives w Suspend Sale tanned Fish. Meat In II.S.~ WABHI Feb. l‘I—(APi— The United price administration tonight suspends" ma slls of canned fish and can- ‘rbe ban-cu public sale of these nob-canned shrimp meat reads and man indeiin h. 0. P. A. sad. howeve- y will be mit- tsd ration g be h ewtetod “hi. ward lungcs at the Dn egropetrovsk ltiver crossings and the rnli Junctions east of the Dniepcr ben . ll that il true, as Moscow asserts. Russian leadership onlgilessed the Nazi high common’. Kharkov was tshcn by a flanking movement from the north, not the south. That it fell rims before Nazi Generals had ex. pected it to give way is stron iy indicated. And with its fall not only is the wlioic Nazi front from mniensk to the sea of Azov shaken and tottering: but an outside Russian trap is inking shape designed to force enemy retreat from the Dnieper Plateau and the Crimes. Soviet smiles which ci-ushed Ngzi dc-frncii oi Itihsrkov are reported by Moscow to he surging on westward without pause. Ahead Poltava junction on the Kharkov-Kiev railroad. They have some the Vorikln, northern tributary of t r. The Vorilsla is a minor stream but. does o fer the mtreating enem the first water-guarded defence position of any consequence west of har- kov. It also covers the Kremeuchug crossings of the Dnieper, 70 miles southwest of Poltnva. which must hr a main objective now of the Russian westward thrust‘ from Kharkov. Used Sub To Carry 511119598 To Malta A BRITISH PORT. Feb. 1'I—(CP) i -Save some iaurcls for the por- poise. the Roval Navy's first sup- ' t marine tanker. when it comes to vital distributing honors for the histoilo defense oi Malls. Brltairrs George Cross Island. - For without the porpoise the Royal Air Force and (lure-devil pilots like F0. George (Screwball) Beurllng nf Verdun, Que. “hero of Malza" wouldn't have been able t.o stem the vicious Axis air onslnuuni. during the gamsoirs ‘oiackest 110111". When bombing rezvlicd a peak of intensity the amount of gasoline and ammunition supplies getting through to the heroic defenders was practically negligible. But the porpoisi. a 2.000-ton ves- sel designed ior minc-iayinfl 8W1 torpedo attack. came to the rescue fcflve "He: in the nick of time, the Admiralty evacuated. revealed when the submarine ar- rived here after completing l4 months service in the Mediterra- nean. She was hurriedly converted into a "hidden merchantman” and torpedo and mine racks were load- ed with vital war materials. Thin with additional sllbplies towed in a small satellite craft she cracked the Axis blockade. Com- RUSSIA - Bogodukhov. line, taken by Russians who con- tinue to smash Germans back from area also captured. American counter-attack. advance l8 miles in central Tunisia; Am- bont. base: Germany. Holland, Belgium northern France. submarines sink iive enemy shi Sydney and Max Siegel of Glace‘ Bay. charged in connection with ‘ Mac- t “An unspectacuiar lob." merited Licui. L.W.A. Bennington as he docked hhv. ship. He didn't mention the thrill of destroying a large tanker and_ an [armed vessel as well as surviving -neariy 100 depth charges. Others lhowever. were more than anxious to idescribe those battle actions. targets in South Pacific area. FAR EAST _ Kwauztung province. (‘R0935 DOGS IN MISSOURI Increase In Bheese Quota For Britain —'AP\- Despite a plea by a SOHYIS 8.000 letter carriers were OTTAWA. Fob. l7—-(CP) —- A . riculture Minister Gardiner toniglgit told s. meetin of the Ontario Cheese Producers‘ Association here that Britain has asked Canada to 2:112:15?“ itimotityooo mpoiééitils ‘of e mon April 1. 3 8 n“ n“ 1h "l! Year lust closing, he paid, Canada undertook to supply 125, 000.000 pounds to Great Britain. bu has been able to exceed that s- tmount. D the l2 months. s.- ,bout 148,000. pounds will be er- P°Ti¢d_i47_i.if1C_II_Ili_i_E§__Kingd0Ifl. mil-ice killed it bill nets bite a carrier nr ncwshnjv the owners‘ premises. FIRE AT SUSSEX SUSSEX. N.B.. Feb destroyed s two-storey George l-I. White. was occupied by A. B. Teakics and "SALAA" corrss I exposes the north face o! the Dnleper bend to Russian attacks that ' oi them Us‘: ‘ h ibilt t will ~ - miles or less to go across rolling. ogenn ciountry to reach that point of mm t e Doss 1 y l be “on 6 Ii E railway junction on Kharkov-Suruy; Kharkov; other towns in Kharkov NORTH AI-‘RICA—Germans break ericans try to consolidate new de- three Allied alrfields AERIAL- R. A. E-R. C. A. l‘. bombs-rs. in most extensive niuht raids of war. hammer Lorient U- also attack targets in and SOUTHWEST PACIFIC — U. S. P's damage one cargo ship and pro- brhiy sink one cruiser; Allied planes attack Japanese sirdrorne and other Japanese land forces in Kwsrigchowwan. hem-h- iessed territory on southern (‘hin- Pflt 001,8!» iirrflaelng operations In JEFFERSON CITY. MAL. Feb. l7 . l7 —(CPi- Loss esttmsled at $123M occurred on Main Street today when fire building The the Ham-Blow grocery. Dr. and Mrs. tho owner. iank Subs Raid Jap Sitggply Lines In Pacific Rommel In 18 _ A " {Demands Full Discussion 0n Dieppe Attack Debate On Throne Speech May Be Lon- ciuded Today. OTFAWA, Feb. 1'1 —-tCP)— De- mand that the government. pemut lull discussion o1 the combined operations attack on Dieppe. with explanation o! wnv plans for a pic- llmlnary air bombardment had been abandoned. was made in the House of Commons today by Rev. T. C. Douglas (C.C.F. Weybum). ‘rue dlnLUSSitlll CUulQ be public or private but it should be held with- out l’ 1i because much remained lo be t1 d concerning the attack, said Mr. LJOl/lgli-S, continuing the Throne Speech debate. He said tribute could be paid the men who carried out the raid last August but the same could not be said for those who organized it. l... P. Picard (Lib. Bellechasse) and Howard c. Green (Prog. con. Vancouver South) also spoke in the Throne Speech today. J. A. Bianchette (Lib. Compton) will continue the debate tomorrow, eluded in the evening. In all. T2 members now have participated in it. Navy minister Macdonald told the House he woud be “quite content" if the House wished to inquire into administration of the Canadian Navy or any part of it when he made a long statement in answer to critical articles published in the magazine “boating? Mr. Macdonald said that some of the statements in an article by Andrew D.’ MacLea. . a retired uiaval officer, might e deemed to constitute an offence against the defence of Canada 1' guiations. He tT-Splliied Mr. MacLea ‘s statements that the navv had too many nigh- ranklxig officers. that permanent force men got too large a share of promotions and decorations. that: fairmile boat men were not given special training before being as- signed- to these vesseig and that there were avoidabe delays in pro- duction which kept crews waiting long periods. Mr. Douglas said it should be ex- planed why tanks were landed at Dieppe on a beach facing a 12-foot seriwall whzch had- not been breach- ed. as air photos would have shown the impossibility of scaling this wall larder: it rad been nnrtinlv de- molished by air bombardment. Madame Dhiang Kai-SheklSpeak WASHINGTON. Feb. i’l— (AP)- Madame Chiang Kai-Slick, wile of the Chinese Geueralissimo, arrived in Washington today and was wel- comed personally by President and Mrs. Roosevelt. Madame Cniang had been in the United States since Nov. 27. But she has been undergoing medical treat- ment for an old injury and this was her first appearance in the National Capital. Will Visit Ottawa OTTAWR. Feb. 17—(CP;—-Mme. Cliiimg Kai-Shelf, Wife of the Chinese Gencralissimo and now a visitor in Washington. will come to Spokesmm “'11” 551d 7-992 0i M15fl0itawa for a brief visit but final tod arrangements have not yet been bitten by dogs inst year. the House ivorked out, it was understood to- of Representatives Judiciary Com- day. making dog- nwncrs liable for damages if their‘: °"‘~ Another h]; At German ill-Boat Lairs Allies chalked up another MAJ". and R.O.A.F.—and jubiiu int-rs declared that, M11101"! Proved their persisten 1.11 bases were successful, moi-t haul to Lorient. at the nor raid as heavy and rolders were brought down. ~_m_ | d“- LONDON. Feb. l7 —(AP)— The 510W ldainst U-boat iairs-a 13%! N-B- mid on [orient last night by ihc photographic _ hfllilwflnk of the Nam‘ continen- (‘iant bombers carri d h . . lnuii of the largest boernbsa 1053i “M” “d eflmom“ pmblen" m 111cm cud of the Ba of Bisca on - ' babi be the French coast, arid laid a iiery | and he wow“ pm y pattern of explosives over the fav- orite base of German submarines. The Air Ministry described the concentrated. indicating that hundreds of bomb- ers again battered the port which m!’ An east coast and a south coast . District Militlary Headquarters 1o- town were attacked by strafers to-l of .4‘ e’s_ i-r" “-~..___ _ Learn first u. gill)“ pit-z. ,. 1......- ' Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. cannon. fi-Tuizswpav, FEBRUARY flail... 2A 10+ P155 A M‘ wdwfi-rv, Heavy Blo....... Rained Gm Routecl Enemy Loses Another .17~::;: t Railroad Town; Soviet 1.3.13.2 Still Developing. x-i (By Eddy Gilmore, Associated Press Stsff ‘t’ ~-) MOSCOW. Feb 17—(AP)-Soviet tics; .. 1.3‘.- ing the Germans back from Kharkov in h" ~ treat have driven 36 miles to the noriixv/est to capture Bogodukhov, on the Kharkov-Funny rail- road, the Russians announced tonight i=1 :1 spa-rial communique. _ (Red army men rained “heavy blows on the remnants of the routed German omits" and "the Hitierite path of retreat is covered with bocifcz: cf dead enemy officers and men as well a: '- doned German heavy and light arms." do». the Russian midnight communique as recorded in London by the Soviet Monitor.) The fail of Bogodukhov leaves open only the Poitava-Kharkov railroad for the Germans in their retreat to the west. and the Russian tiriv-‘rs in ‘the Kharkov region were reported still developing. Soviet soldiers slsc captured t Graivoron, 20 miles north of Bogo- dukov. and Zmiev, 2o miles due south of Kharkov. the Soviets Ni- nounced. To the south in the Donets offensive the Rod Army seized Slavyansk. railroad Junction. on the Lomovaya-Donets basin rail- road. and 60 miles north of the .. --v.. l ‘News Briefs: German stronghold of Stalino. . . _., __ (The Germans were losing hea- dagillxgnfikgf“; i?” ‘T!’ fly “kfmégmeifg ‘gfinighfggig’ lie-raid c-ud and... u..- . . rom ar v. e - , , munlque reporting that (gas Rduss- gxg°rsngzini_“fu:i_zf_i“a”?!. i" i t ‘ . ' . self-propelling guns. and a large z‘;"l'f,‘pié"'lwi‘xrif‘gaff.l ‘\_‘ number of troop-carriers and “h” "‘- ~ ‘ trucks." One lllussiankunlg cap- tured a plane. nne tan s. sero- , . —' fl _ I __ I“ m” mm‘ as g ' g’ ernble forces in i 2A3.‘étifi.‘él.t"fi.°ilii“liflJifflffi ‘ ifnr sou 1cm :::::;*.‘.§"f..l:i“2.?% d’. fifiilfiiflasi? rush - * ' " - V. \iq§ u. ., tov thoroughfare. fldigrililgig it," W. _ , , (In the Rostov region. where a 1' “Chm n, IQU‘I“‘K)'_‘~ w. _ Russian column has pushed hnif- Qwanghqg" s ‘ ’ ‘ ‘ ' way n. Tdgsnroz. enemies led So- ‘c -~ vici. infantrymen "by little known to: wssnvvrrru-i‘ us». various? “muss: er»- ~ I? with guerilla aid took two "impor- 2:1,!“ "Li: "M .’j_‘,'v_":_‘_ taut populated places." said the t" a spin," NWTN.. late communique.) 42 French Ships To Aid Allies PHILADELPHLA, Feb. l7—(AP)-- I _ _ __ > Forty-two French warships in nd- yr ca‘; v dition to four which steamed aura-s . " ‘ V ‘ - the Atlantic last week soon will _ ‘ s fighiing on the side of the United j Nations, Vice-Admiral Raimomi Fernnrti, Chief of the French nut n1 , mission to the United states. said inevitaiiiv u-"l rosy" i rent restrictions w. vvriww Viliiti to producers. BRPIK-G ,_~fli'lli'~"' "m i LnwRPonn Wrfi» The tildes‘. rrsr‘ '." “' elor all o.’ h'< ‘M -~ ~~ (‘Pd today. ny. The stocky Admiral skirted quest- ions on “politic? twseriing that "all the men and cffitsrs of the French fleet want to do is fight the mans alongside the United States and her Allies." "For more than two years." he said. “we have been out of the fight against Germany This is the o9- portunlty we have betn longing for. we want to be friends with the mericans and British forever-to fight. beside you and win." Bracken Leaves CAR‘. j 1' a. ‘ i , Btcqr. 1.1m: 3 is inf. Sfouri ‘I orrswa. no. n-tcm - l-ion. L John Bracken, National leader oil‘ the Progressive Conservative party. iwiil leave tomorrow for New Brun- SWICK to familiarize himself with Hiflh ‘iris thi< RIlii itmizzhi Wt 1o S1111 sets 1h» v- rlsos tnmnrr ' . that, province, i An announcement from the party BWBY from Ottawa for about a Witikltlixlld Fun mo uullrsazzv" - 1mm“ _ k ___________ ' ‘than Char. r -n ‘MAY EXTEND RESTRICTIONS, CM‘ Prim‘ W,“ F F SYDNEY Nab n _(CP,_ DAILY ext 1.1-1 srvnir Corps here was announced at bu" 12.30 n In, 4 flit m Arrive day, indicating steady growth filo 0011i l.“ p. m.. 1.05 p. m. illthildih. time concrete pens for so submar- T. a. Bridgefond of saint John. N.‘ pm... 3......" “m... y... . ..._ Imps. only two bombers failed to 13.. port. passenser agent 0i W" 11.40 a.m 2.00 M... 4.1m p... 1m mrturn. one of them from the R..C. traffic for the Canadian Paciiic 1m" 1A.!’- bomber group. and One inter- Railway, said today civilian travel. brave (‘upr- 'i"..|.n.»..un<~ - in nu iccpting fighter was shot down. restrictions my be extended if tra- a.m 11s p m 3.0.‘. p.11... 3.4:. inn 5 Operating over Britain in .vel ‘by the armed forcesne shows s 8.15 c-m- atronger force than recentl theifurt er ncrease n you . , , _ Germans bombed n place in ysoutn‘ _______ nnfu Wig Qfm‘ E Wales which the Berlin rndio s/mrr JOHN. ma. no. l1 - "‘~‘“ E‘ i ~“ --“‘ identified as Swansea. Twelve (CH-Formation of s second com- h M ‘hm ‘a M cersons were killed. Three of the pahy of the Canadian Women Ar- c M‘ " §""','|_‘h‘_" "' '“ " Chnré-rtiotuivn 8.30 n. ill. i1 Charlottetown l p. m. Igxg- -